The Real Effects of the Bank Lending Channel Gabriel Jiménez Atif Mian José-Luis Peydró Jesus Saurina This version: May 2020



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2. Empirical Strategy
This section provides the empirical strategy to estimate the firm-level (and loan-level) bank lending channel, including the KM extension and the matched firm-bank dataset (with comprehensive credit data matched with firm and bank balance sheet data.
2.1 Framework
We follow the KM framework (see Khwaja and Mian (2008)) that have also been used in numerous papers to identify the credit supply effects at loan level (among many others,
Schnabl (2012), Iyer et al. (2014)) and extend the KM technique to analyze the firm-level analysis, which we explain in this subsection. Consider an economy with banks and firms indexed by i and j respectively. Firm j borrows from n
j
banks at time t and assume (without loss of generality) that it borrows the same amount from each of the n
j
banks. The economy experiences two shocks at t: a firm-level credit demand shock η
j
that proxy for firm-level fundamentals and a bank-specific credit supply shock δ
i
. η
j
reflects changes in the firm’s fundamentals as for example productivity or customer demand shocks, or risk shock, which are all largely unobserved. Therefore, it represents unobserved firm-level fundamentals. δ
i
reflects instead changes in the bank’s funding situation, such as a run on short term liabilities (a negative shock) or new opportunities to access wholesale financing (a positive shock. In this paper, δ
i
is the initial exposure to real estate assets of bank i. Let y
ij denote the log change in credit from bank i to firm j. Then the basic credit channel equation in the face of credit supply and demand shocks can be written as


7
𝑦
"#
= 𝛼 + 𝛽 ∗ 𝛿
"
+ 𝜂
#
+ 𝜀
"#
(1) Equation (1) assumes that the change in bank credit from bank i to firm j is determined by an economy wide secular trend α, bank (credit supply) and firm (credit demand) shocks, and an idiosyncratic shock ε
ij.
While equation (1) is reduced form in nature, it can be derived as an equilibrium condition by explicitly modeling credit supply and demand schedules (see KM. We keep the analysis deliberately simple hereto focus on the core estimation problem.
β if often referred to as the bank lending channel, and we refer to it as the loan-level local) lending channel in this paper. It can be estimated from (1) using OLS, giving us 𝛽 +
012(4 5
,7 8
)
:;< (4 5
)
. The expression implies that as long as credit supply and demand shocks are significantly correlated,
𝛽
-./
in (1) would be a biased estimate of the true β. For example, if banks receiving a positive liquidity shock are more likely to lend to firms that simultaneously receive a positive credit demand boost, then β would be biased upwards. KM resolve this issue by focusing on firms with n
j
≥2, and absorbing out η
j
though firm fixed- effects. The estimated coefficient
𝛽
=>
then provides an unbiased estimate of β. However,
𝛽
=>
does not give us a complete picture of the net firm-level effect of bank lending channel on the economy. In particular, individual firms affected by some banks (in the loan-level channel due to a positive β in equation (1)) may seek alternative sources of bank financing to compensate for any loss of credit. Alternatively, if firms benefit from greater provision of credit via a positive credit supply shock to an individual bank, their borrowing from elsewhere maybe cut either voluntarily or due to a crowding-out effect. What it matters for real effects is this firm-level credit availability. Thus, in order to gain a complete picture of the bank lending channel effect, one must compute its consequences at the aggregate firm level. We can do so by estimating the related firm-level version of (1):
𝑦
#
= 𝛼 + 𝛽 ∗ 𝛿
#
+ 𝜂
#
+ 𝜀
#
(2)


8 denotes the log change (t+1 over t) in credit for firm j across all banks. It is not a simple average of y
ij
from (1) since a firm can start borrowing from new banks as well in the extensive margin (potentially a key margin for firms adjustment of credit supply shocks. denotes the average initial exposure to real estate assets of banks initially lending to firm j at time t, i.e.
𝛿
#
=
4 5
?
8
"∈A
8
where N

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